Baron Corbin Doesn’t Feel Bad That He Didn’t Grind The Indie Scene Before Signing With WWE: “That’s Not Something To Brag About”

(Photo Credit: WWE)

WWE star Baron Corbin recently appeared on WWE’s The Bump, where the former King of the Ring winner discussed a number of different topics, including his thoughts on wrestlers grinding out the indie scene, and how he doesn’t feel bad that he never had to go that route on his path towards becoming a main roster talent. Highlights from the interview are below.

On his journey to WWE and how he doesn’t feel bad that he didn’t grind it out on the indies like a lot of other guys did:

A lot of these guys, it’s a bragging right. Ten years, I’ve been wrestling for 15 years. Why is that a bragging right? I made a phone call, and the WWE brought me in for a tryout and signed me within the week. That’s how it works. I don’t need to go work for a hot dog and popcorn in your local gymnasium. That’s not what I do. It’s not a bragging right for me to go, ‘Ah, I drove around in my buddy’s Honda Civic for six hours to go to this show and then drive 12 hours to this show and the car broke down and we ran out of gas, and we didn’t money to eat. That’s not something you brag about.

How guys like Kevin Owens, Johnny Gargano, and AJ Styles give people false hopes because they are the not the athlete that he is:

These guys come in and that’s part of their story. They’re giving hope to hope to people who sit in the audience and go, ‘Ah, I wanna be Johnny Gargano.’ How many little kids see that? Because they have no hope, they have no goals, they have no dreams, and they wanna see a guy like that and they go, ‘Oh, man, if this little guy or Kevin Owens, this guy, I relate to him. We’re similar, we do the same things, we like the same things. I can become a WWE Superstar.’ No, you can’t. Look, this job is not for everybody. My mailman is a nice guy. This job is not for him. This is for elite level athletes, world renowned competitors, and guys when you walk into a room, they look at somebody like me and they go, ‘That guy is somebody.’ If they’ve never watched WWE before, they go, man, look at that watch, look at the diamonds that he’s wearing, look at that suit. That guy is somebody important, whether they’ve seen me or not. You walk into a room with Johnny, with Kevin, with AJ Styles, and you’re just like, oh man, there’s some people in the room hanging out. I saw 500 guys like that at the mall today. There’s a difference.

(H/T and transcribed by Fightful)

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